Custody, Capital, and Control Risks Around Bitcoin The January 05, 2026 episode of What Bitcoin Did features Simon Dixon arguing that fiat money creation and regulatory design concentrate power in banks and allied institutions.
Bitcoin’s Governance Illusions and Block Space Reality The January 06, 2026 episode of Supply Shock features John Carvalho arguing that many Bitcoin governance disputes mistake social coordination battles for protocol control.
Bitcoin’s Endgame: Incentives, Custody, and the Fiat Exit The January 05, 2026 episode of Simply Bitcoin features Knut Svanholm explaining why “everything divided by 21 million” captures Bitcoin’s scarcity logic and long-run purchasing power thesis.
Wall Street’s Shift From Dismissal to Monetization of Bitcoin The January 04, 2026 episode of Green Candle podcast features Joe Consorti arguing that major US financial institutions have moved from criticizing Bitcoin to packaging it into mainstream products to capture demand and fees.
AI-Led Reflation and Bitcoin in a Post-Labor Growth Regime The January 04, 2026 episode of the Jordi Visser Podcast features Jordi arguing that the global economy is entering an early-cycle reflation regime driven by AI-enabled productivity rather than labor growth.
AI Agents, Stablecoins, and Bitcoin Positioning for 2026 Summary The January 03, 2026 episode of The Pomp Podcast features Jordi Visser arguing that “AI bubble” fears will recur as a market narrative even if real adoption keeps widening. Visser links AI to rising productivity and profit margins, warns that investors overreact to episodic shocks such as tariffs or
Jeff Booth on Bitcoin, Debt, the Politics of Control (Bitcoin as a Freedom Protocol) The January 02, 2026 episode of You’re The Voice features Jeff Booth arguing that technology-driven deflation collides with debt-based money, pushing institutions toward coercion, surveillance, and narrative control.